Consider this question. Now, it isn't exactly the best of questions, but multiple people (including myself) were kind enough to answer, and explain to the OP how their code works1. Due to this, however, I noticed something: In the time since the question was posted, every single answer has been downvoted, including the correct ones.
In short, it appears that we still have a problem of people downvoting answers based on the question's quality, instead of the answers' quality. Considering that this is implied to be a violation of site policy2, and that it's very clearly an attempt to exploit a loophole in the Roomba3, should anyone who is found to do this be reprimanded?
Related:
- Is it okay to downvote answers to bad questions?
- Downvoting good answers on bad questions, helpful or not?
- Punish answerers of bad questions
- Penalize or reward answers based on question score?
[Note that this question is not about whether it's okay to do so, which it very clearly is NOT. Rather, it is solely about whether action should be taken against people who do so, which is a topic that related questions don't appear to cover.]
[Note that the answers to the example question provided may or may not actually be a victim of this behaviour; I lack the necessary tools to determine whether it is or isn't the case (and, as pointed out in the comments, even with tools there would still be uncertainty as to the motive behind the voting, as all they would provide is circumstantial evidence), but find the presence of exactly one downvote on each answer (as of the time I posted this) suspicious.]
1: Personally, I answered because the comments in the OP's code indicate that they were trying to figure out how it works, and on the right track, but just needed a bit of help wrapping their head around it. The code itself is an entirely valid function (assuming the ever-present-among-newbies using namespace std;
is in effect), of the sort that would be present in a tutorial on how to use pointers; it was likely the answer to a homework question, but they didn't understand how it worked. Basically, I answered because they indicated that they actually wanted to understand the code, and not be just one of the help vampires that copy-pastes code beyond their comprehending.
2: The Reversal badge is awarded for supplying good answers to bad questions, implying that site policy supports answering bad questions, as long as the answer is well thought out. This is likely intended to ensure that even bad questions have a duplicate source, but I can't say for certain. [It doesn't always work out this way, however, and there have been mentions of correct-but-useless answers getting the badge.] Similarly, this blog post suggests that good answers are the site's most useful resource, which contradicts the "downvote all answers on bad questions, whether they're good or bad" mentality.
3: To my knowledge, the Roomba simply checks whether the question and answers are all downvoted to decide whether to delete the question, and doesn't take any other data into consideration, not even things such as whether all answers were downvoted by the same user, or whether they were downvoted at roughly the same time. This leaves it vulnerable to exploitation by robo-downvoters.